Harold Camping is a perfect example of what the Bible teaches about false teachers and doctrines. He even claims to be a prophet. I’ll stick with God’s true prophets revealed to us in His Word.

2 Peter 2:1But there were also false prophets among the people, just as there will be false teachers among you. They will secretly introduce destructive heresies, even denying the sovereign Lord who bought them—bringing swift destruction on themselves.

Harold Camping and his followers seem be reading a very different Bible then mine. It is stated numerous times that the Lord is returning for His church. But what they choose to ignore is that only God Himself knows the exact time. For all the revelations John saw, he was never given specific dates.

Matthew 24:36 “No one knows about that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven. nor the Son, but only the Father.”

Basically, anyone who goes around and attempts to act like a prophet...is bogus. Anyone who predicts God will do this, or that....is bogus. Anyone who says that God personally talks to them and is 60 foot tall...is bogus. And anyone who wants to interpret the Bible as meaning something that is pretty far-fetched....is bogus.

The damage this Nut does to the message Christians are trying to get out to the unsaved is unmanageable. Using phrases like The Bible Guarantees It, only makes it harder for our missionaries and evangelist to discuss the Gospel with those who dont know the Bible, particularly in foreign lands where much of his advertising was done.
And when discussing prophecy and what God says about his second coming with others, we will be forever doing damage control, when they come back with wasnt that supposed to happen back in May of 2011?

This is why Jesus gave a special warning in Mathew 24:11 And many false prophets shall rise, and shall deceive many. For he knew how easily deceived man is.

BTW, this book was written in 1881; you wouldn't believe how accurate it is!

Reading this book was one of the greatest graces of my life!" St. Thérèse of Lisieux

In the late nineteenth century, Father Charles Arminjon, a priest from the mountains of southeastern France, assembled his flock in the town cathedral to preach a series of conferences to help them turn their thoughts away from this lifes mean material affairsand toward the next lifes glorious spiritual reward. His wise and uncompromising words deepened in them the spirit of recollection that all Christians must have: the abiding conviction that heavenly aims, not temporal enthusiasms, must guide everything we think, say, and do.

When Father Arminjons conferences were later published in a book, many others were able to reap the same benefitincluding fourteen-year-old Thérèse Martin, then on the cusp of entering the Carmelite convent in Lisieux. Reading it, she says, plunged my soul into a happiness not of this earth. Young Thérèse, filled with a sense of what God reserves for those who love him, and seeing that the eternal rewards had no proportion to the light sacrifices of life, copied out numerous passages and memorized them, repeating unceasingly the words of love burning in my heart.

Now the very book that so inspired the Little Flower is available for the first time in English.

Let the pages of The End of the Present World and the Mysteries of the Future Life fill you with the same burning words of love, with the same ardent desire to know God above all created things, that St. Thérèse gained from them. Let them also enrich your understanding of certain teachings of the Faith that can often seem so mysterious, even frightening:

The signs that will precede the worlds end

The coming of the Antichrist, and how to recognize him

The Judgment and where it may send us: heaven, hell, and purgatory

Biblical end-times prophecy: how to read it and not be deceived

Jesus commands us to be ever-watchful for his return, and ever-mindful that we have no lasting city on earth. The End of the Present World and the Mysteries of the Future Life is an invaluable aid to inculcating in your spirit that heavenly orientation, without which true human happiness cannot be foundin this world or the next.

1Co 13:1 Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I have become as sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal.
1Co 13:2 And though I have prophecies, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so as to move mountains, and do not have charity, I am nothing.

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posted on 05/24/2011 7:19:32 PM PDT
by newberger
(Put not your trust in princes, in sons of men in whom there is no salvation.)

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